Mel Waters lived in a town which was home to a strange, bottomless pit. The local people would throw their garbage in it (and had been doing so for more than fifty years), but no one ever heard the garbage hitting the bottom of it. Mel eventually came in possession of the land where the hole was located. He did a bunch of tests on it to see if he could find out how deep the hole was. But no matter how many tests he ran, he could never figure out how deep the hole was. The story gets strange
I was wrong about the starting post date for It Happened on a Warm Autumn Night. Tomorrow, Monday, since it is already saved on site, waiting for me to press the Publish button.
How much water does it take to make one pound of beef, including the water required to grow the food to feed the cow?
Which is awesome, because now I get a good hour to chill at home before I have to go back to school. Thank god I live within walking distance.
Now pardon me as I meander about and mentally prepare myself for school.
Hello again, everyone.
Been a while since I posted a blog. Even longer since I really posted about anything movie-related. Hope that you all are doing okay.
Decided to play some catch-up on what movies I'd seen, both for the rest of 2022, and so far in 2023. Some of them will be familiar, no doubt, and others may be a bit more of a surprise.
Thor: Love and Thunder (2022; watched July 21st))
LOL JK anybody who don't dance has a Mercedes they want me to work on ain't no friend of mine.
I think you can already guess what brand of car I'm gonna talk about, and I think y'all know what to do:
There is no landmass covered in ice at the north pole. There is just ocean with drifting ice pieces on the surface. It has been this way since its discovery in the early 1500s.
People on a mass scale, however, seem to remember the north pole being a solid landmass with ice on top (similar to Antarctica). Some even seem to recall being taught this as they were going through school.
Is this the most efficient route west? No, it isn’t. Sweetsong will get there when she gets there; it’s not about the destination, it’s about the journey.
Pre-read by AlwaysDressesInStyle!
happy, that's how you made me feel
many times
but now, i feel like you're ignoring me
(couldn't think of a rhyme)
why? you refuse to tell me
though you used to
please answer my question
what did i do?
is it something i said?
is it something i did?
is it something i'm doing?
is it something i'm trying?
you're one of my best friends
or you were
friends don't do this to friends
you're not her
you're not the perky, fun girl i met last year
you're someone i don't know
Remember how every once in a while you and your neighborhood gets one of those neighbors from hell? The one household you wish would simply disappear and thus relieve much if not all the suffering your neighbors and you have been forced to endure for an untold amount of time?
I made a response to this thread about assigning each of the HuMane 7 a traditional element (fire, water, earth, blah blah blah). I like adding grounded logic and scientific concepts to explain esoteric phenomena. I see a lot of uninspired or poorly thought-out story concepts so, rather than just complain, here’s an idea I’m sharing for anyone to use, if you like. I’m not pretending
A mare can’t stay in one place for too long . . . Chicago has plenty of opportunities, but the open rails are calling.
Pre-read by AlwaysDressesInStyle
Apparently my birthday is a good day to read pony stories.
The stories I read today:
Butter Up by GaPJaxie
Seamless by Terrasora
Thicker than Water by DemonBrightSpirit
Luna, There’s a Sentient Race Inside Your Mane by boardgamebrony
Allure by TheSlorg
Butter Up
by GaPJaxie
Top of the morning to ya, my good lads and lasses.
This is your friendly film, TV show, and episode reporter here with another review.
Today, for the 1st installment of this year's "Thanksgiving Treat", I'm gonna give you guys my take of "The Water Horse: Legend of the Deep".
Here's the rundown of this tale: